Scores of interviews with Iowa Republicans over the weekend turned up scant outrage over the sexual harassment allegations leveled against presidential candidate Herman Cain. That's partly because of the good will he's engendered among voters, and partly because of a widespread mistrust of the media, which has been extensively airing the allegations.

But there's another reason Cain may escape condemnation. Twenty years after Anita Hill accused Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment at his confirmation hearings, searing the issue into the national consciousness and spawning an untold number of workplace seminars, the issue generates little shock value.

"Sometimes I think, so what's new?'' asked Joy Corning, a former lieutenant governor in Iowa. "How many politicians do we know that have good moral standing? Moral character is important to me, but there have been a lot of disappointments in both parties.''

Corning hasn't picked a candidate yet, Lois Wignall, a retiree from Altoona, was wearing a Cain pin at the state Republican party dinner Friday and said she has no plans to take it off.

"What may seem harassment to one person may not be to me,'' she said. Asked if being invited to a hotel room constituted harassment, she said, "You can say no. You don't have to go.''